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2019 Paris Roubaix Results

  • Ron 

 

ROUBAIX, FRANCE – APRIL 14: Arrival / Philippe Gilbert of Belgium and Team Deceuninck-QuickStep / Celebration / Nils Politt of Germany and Team Katusha-Alpecin / Track Roubaix Velodrome / during the 117th Paris-Roubaix a 257km race from CompiËgne to Roubaix / @Paris_Roubaix / #ParisRoubaix / PRBX / L’Enfer du Nord / on April 14, 2019 in Roubaix, France. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

Deceuninck – Quick-Step celebrated their 700th victory today in the most appropriate place today with Philippe Gilbert coming out on top at Paris-Roubaix after 257 kilometers, over 6 million cobblestones and 29 pavé sectors. Gilbert is the 7th oldest rider to win the race.

For Deceuninck – Quick-Step, it was another masterclass, as the team placed three more riders in the top 10: Belgian Champion Yves Lampaert, who finished third, Florian Sénéchal (sixth and the best Frenchman at the end of the day) and Zdenek Stybar, who came home eighth and recorded his sixth top 10 finish in seven Paris-Roubaix participations.

“I am extremely happy! I was disappointed after Flanders, but in the week leading to Roubaix I returned to training and focused on Roubaix,” said Gilbert. “I came into the race with pressure, because I was very motivated to overcome what had happened last Sunday and go for the win, especially as I felt that I had good legs. It’s hard to believe what I’ve done today, it’s something really special and it will take a few days to realise what has happened and what I’ve achieved.”

ROUBAIX, FRANCE – APRIL 14: Podium / Yves Lampaert of Belgium and Team Deceuninck-QuickStep / Philippe Gilbert of Belgium and Team Deceuninck-QuickStep / Nils Politt of Germany and Team Katusha-Alpecin / Celebration at the 117th Paris-Roubaix a 257km race from CompiËgne to Roubaix / @Paris_Roubaix / #ParisRoubaix / April 14, 2019 in Roubaix, France. (Photo by Luc Claessen/Getty Images)

The 117th edition of Paris-Roubaix started from Compiègne and was a fast and windy one, with a breakaway going clear more than 70 kilometers into the race. Tim Declercq and Yves Lampaert were extremely active and helped the move forge a 30-second gap which put pressure on the peloton, who had to work hard in order to nullify it ahead of the iconic Arenberg Forest, the symbol of the “Queen of the Classics” since 1968.

Before entering the first five-star rated sector of the day, Deceuninck – Quick-Step lost Iljo Keisse, a key player up until that point, after the experienced Belgian hit some traffic furniture and had to abandon. Later examinations revealed that Iljo had suffered a complex left elbow fracture, which requires surgery, that will take place at the Herentals hospital.

Arenberg reduced the bunch to less than 50 riders, including all the remaining Deceuninck – Quick-Step members, but the real action got ignited only on the Beuvry to Orchies segment, where Philippe Gilbert was among the three men to respond to a big attack of Nils Politt (Katusha-Alpecin), inside 70 kilometers to go. On the run-in to the infamous Mons-en-Pévèle, everything came back together, but another brutal acceleration saw eight men extricate themselves from the bunch.

Gilbert was again there, as was Yves Lampaert, and the Deceuninck – Quick-Step duo cooperated with the other six riders in the move, carrying a one-minute lead onto the final cobblestone stretches. On the brutal Carrefour de l’Arbre, Philippe and Yves took turns to attack, wearing down the remaining riders, but it was on Gruson – the sector made famous by a crash of Bernard Hinault at the beginning of the ‘80s – that the group split, leaving only Philippe and Politt in the lead.

Just as Lampaert was accelerating and distancing his remaining companions, riding to a deserved podium finish, the front duo – who worked smoothly together – where entering the velodrome, where Gilbert blew past the German with 150 meters remaining, sprinting to his fifth victory in a Monument, after those at Ronde van Vlaanderen (2017), Liège–Bastogne–Liège (2011) and Il Lombardia (2009, 2010).

“I knew that joining Deceuninck – Quick-Step would be an important step in my career and I am really happy and proud that I’m a member of the Wolfpack. I am the kind of rider who likes new challenges, this motivates me, and here I found plenty of these: from winning Ronde or Roubaix to winning Isbergues, which was a race that was missing from my palmares”, Philippe told the media after netting the team’s 19th Monument. “That’s why after today and the celebration we will have this evening, I will reset my mind and focus on the Ardennes Classics, where I hope that the squad’s formidable spring will continue.”

25 Year Old Nils Politt Takes Second

Nils Politt showed pure determination and solid resolve in his race, taking second place on the boards of the velodrome in Roubaix with a time of 5:58:02 to match that of Gilbert. It was a spectacular result from Politt, 25, moving up from seventh place last year to stand on the 2019 podium in his second participation in the cycling monument.

“So close, but even second in Roubaix at my age I still can’t believe it,” said Politt. “I was feeling good from the first moment I woke up this morning. For the whole race the team did a great, great job and I think we’ve had such a good classics season. It’s unbelievable to me to get second in Roubaix.” Politt placed fifth in last week’s Tour of Flanders.

“I saw in the feed zone that Gilbert wanted to go, so I went with him. With Peter Sagan and his group coming back to us, I didn’t have to go so deep. At the end it was a little bit of bad luck for me that Gilbert’s teammate was coming back to us on the velodrome. Gilbert was willing to gamble a bit. But I still have some years and I hope I can one day win this race.”

Polittt’s teammate Marco Haller rode in service of Politt today, earning himself a fine 16th place finish, and expressed his great pride at the success of Nils: “The team just finished on the podium in a monument. I am so happy and proud to have been part of it. It was six hours of stress and fighting. It feels like a win, absolutely. We told Nils last night at dinner that this might be the last time he could fly under the radar, so we told him he’d better go out and take it. I think he did that. He rode such a perfect race. He’s a brilliant bike racer.”

2019 Paris – Roubaix Results:

  1. Philippe Gilbert (Bel) Deceuninck-QuickStep at 5h58’02”
  2. Nils Politt (Ger) Team Katusha-Alpecin s.t.
  3. Yves Lampaert (Bel) Deceuninck-QuickStep at 13″
  4. Sep Vanmarcke (Bel) EF Education First at 40″
  5. Peter Sagan (Svk) Bora-Hansgrohe at 42″
  6. Florian Senechal (Fra) Deceuninck-QuickStep at 47″
  7. Mike Teunissen (Ned) Team Jumbo-Visma s.t.
  8. Zdenek Štybar (Cze) Deceuninck-QuickStep s.t.
  9. Evaldas Siskevicius (Ltu) Delko Marseille Provence s.t.
  10. Sebastian Langeveld (Ned) EF Education First s.t.
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